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Dogs &
Chocolate Chocolate
made for human consumption can
cause death in dogs. Dogs are
sensitive to a class of chemicals
called methylxanthines. Caffeine
and theobtomine are members of
that family. Dogs simply cannot
metabolise and excrete
methylxanthines as efficiently as
humans. The half life of those
compounds in the human body is in
the order of 2 to 3 hours, in the
dog it is more like 18 hours.
In a dog the compounds are taken
up by the liver and transmitted
via the bile into the intestine.
They are then converted back into
the original methylxanthines for
another circuit through the
animal. This repeats itself a
number of times and instead of
getting rid of the substances the
dog keeps repoisoning itself.
There are many formulations of
chocolate with varying amounts of
caffeine and theobromine. The
lethal dose of sweet milk
chocolate for a dog is 2 oz per
kilogram of bodyweight. For a 5
kilogram dog this would be about
280 grams. A lethal dose of milk
chocolate for a 25 kilogram would
be about 1.4 kilograms.
Dark chocolate is at least 10
times as lethal. A 25 kilograms
dog could die from the
methylxanthines in 5 ounces.
Symptoms include vomiting,
hyperactivity, restlessness,
hypersensitivity to touch ( a dog
will jump when touched very rapid
heartbeat and rapid breathing
rate. A loss of control of leg
muscles, muscle tremor seizures,
general weakness, coma and finally
death follow.
In my humble opinion it would be a
tragic mistake to encourage a dog
to develop a taste for chocolate.
A small dog left alone in a house
with a box of chocolates might
well follow his nose to the
goodies and commit suicide by
poisoning.
Commitment, Firmness, but
kindness.
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